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Matt Fulchiron



Última Atualização: 16/11/2009

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Status: Em um Relacionamento
Cidade: LOS ANGELES
Estado: CALIFORNIA
País: US
Data de Inscrição: 13/4/2005

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domingo, novembro 30, 2008 

BOB THE HUMAN PIECE OF FUCKING TRASH BURKE

(The middle 7 words are not in quotes because that's actually his God given middle name)

We were somewhere around Barstow at the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold.

If only my life were that interesting.

Fitzgerald's just plain fucking sucked. I played 8 shows there. 6 nights at the old strip in Las Vegas. And I never even got paid. Let me explain.

As soon as I pulled off the highway onto the strip, I knew I was in trouble. I thought I was in Reno. One look at all the big fat white trash in shorts and tank tops sucking on vases full of sweetened liquor as long as their distended torsos, and I knew the week was going to suck. I started cursing out loud in my car. I knew I was going home early this week. I've never been fired before, but I thought for sure this would be the time.

It wasn't supposed to turn out like this. I was supposed to be working the Huntington Funny Bone with my friend Claude Stuart. It got cancelled. Claude recommended this gig as a substitute. It seemed like a good idea when I accepted it. But all of a sudden I didn't want to do it. It's like when you're trying to find a job for ages, or hoping your temp agency is going to call every day. Then when they finally do, you're driving to the job with knots in your stomach.

I checked in to Fitzgerald's. More white trash. People wearing T-shirts advertising their family reunion. Cigarette smoke. People too fat to walk riding rascals, getting on elevators, taking up every square foot possible.

This was the old strip in Vegas. You can tell by looking at it, that it was at one time grand. A place to get away from your life, play a few hands, see a show. Now it's just a place to eat a 99cent hotdog and see a couple of girls topless. Keep in mind, this is the same caliber of woman who in any other city would volunteer to take off her top if you just bought her a 99cent hotdog (P.S. Never initiate a deal like this. Let it come into play naturally).

I was doing a gig for Chuck Johnson. He books the worst shit on the planet (unless you count Dave Tribble) (which is too horrible to even count). He's a nice guy, and I always do ok at said rooms (that's my version of the story anyways). The gigs aren't impossible, they just suck. They're usually make shift and free to the public, with no security, which allows people to do and say whatever they want and walk around the room freely. If he wants to dispute me on this, fine. But first he's got to perform at any one of the countless barnyards he books. I'll let him pick which one.

I mean, I question my own validity in the world as a stand up comedian. But I can't imagine making a living from booking shit rooms. It's not a question of morality, it's the issue of self examination. One must ask oneself, "Is my life valid? Redeeming? Worthwhile to anyone in anyway?"

The worst part about this show was having to open with 35 minutes and no MC. Starting cold and doing 35 minutes is hard. For me anyway. I'm sure a million comedians will write myspace comments about how easy it is or how fun it is, but if you're me, you hate it. And I'm the one writing this thing, so leave me alone. If stand up comedy is so much goddamn fun you should be either writing jokes or out doing it right now instead of reading my blog.

I went to the bar and had a beer. My nerves were shot from all the people I saw in line. Old. People with canes, walkers, and Rascals. Like 40 Mr. Herberts from Family Guy standing in a row. How am I supposed to relate to these artifacts? The greatest generation is not the greatest audience. That's a fact.

Whenever I say I hate playing for old people, my friend Claude always tells me, "Hey man, old people fuck." Um, no they don't. And even if they did, I don't have any jokes about fucking. And besides, that's gross. If old people do fuck, they should stop. Immediately. Today. Right now. They might end up with little old men for babies.

When I showed up to the club, there were extra comedians on the line up. Paul Kozak and Shayma Tash. Jessi Campbell was there as well, and I was all of a sudden relieved. I only had to do 20 minutes, and there was an MC. Yeah, he did magic. Yeah, he brought people on the stage. Yeah that's impossible to follow in Vegas. But I didn't care. Paul was crazy cool, and he took the pain out of my situation. All of a sudden, I had the easiest slot on the show.

The first night was fun. I don't remember much, just that I had a good time on stage. Tons of old people, and they were seated very randomly and all over the place. But it was loose and fun. Kozak was funny, Jessi was funny, Shayma was funny. It was fun.

The rest of the trip was uneventful and I don't remember the details as belonging to any specific day. It was like Purgatory. Not quite Hell. It was just the fact that I wasn't in Heaven with God that bothered me. I was on Earth. It was hot on this section of the planet.

I got free food at the hotel restaurant and ate at least 4 orders of the fajitas during my stay. They were incredible.

I also started watching the That 70's Show at night. I didn't realize it was that funny. The dad is phenomenal. I always loved him in Pinky and The Brain, and I was glad to see he ran with the same type character. And why is Ashton Kusher good in that? Sitcom acting is way harder to pull off than film roles, so what's the problem? I saw his latest movie on a plane. Yuck.

"What Happens in Vegas?"

Sorry. I'll get on with it.

I strayed from my material a lot during the shows. Still did my jokes, but did as much as I could in between. One time on stage, I said I thought I was Reno.

"Boooooooo!" from a complete piece of white garbage in the audience.

"Are you booing me, or Reno?"

"I'm not sure yet."

It's all about respect, y'all. The week prior in San Diego I was booed as I was walking on stage. Hadn't said word yet. Hadn't made it to the mic.

Fuck all y'all. You don't know me.

I proceeded to make fun of whoever it was, but I couldn't tell exactly who was responsible.

After the show, this Laitno kid comes out and he's like, "I was the one booing, bro. But I wasn't booing you. I was booing bill."

The bill.

This waste of chromosomes was booing the bill. He applied a verbal attack to a piece of paper. Inanimate objects are never subject to boos. Ever. At all. Just people.

Yeah, Dumb Guy . Your parents or grandparents, or great grandparents struggled and sacrificed to make a better life for their family by moving to this country, only to wind up with a kid as dumb as an American. Please never go out in public again. Thank you in advance.

As a comedian you are definitely lame until proven hilarious. Everyone who gives me a compliment after a show also has to include the fact that they thought I was going to suck when I walked out on stage. How the fuck do you think I got on stage? By signing up for an open mic? It's a booked show with a difficult and competitive screening process. Stop being retarded everybody. Please? Please? Just for me? Could everybody stop being as dumb as a bag of rocks? And if you can't, can you at least just be quiet and not talk to me. That would be even better. Thank you in advance.

It doesn't make any sense.

I don't know. Maybe it's important to humiliate and criticize others. It keeps people from becoming greater than you, and sorry that they ever tried to do something monumental, or even different than the norm. Yes. Now I see the light. We must tear down those that try. Even if they are successful, it's important to let people know they are worthless. It only takes a second to shout an insult, or disrupt a show, but the memory will be there forever if you do it correctly.

There's a movie out called "Heckler." It's all about how shitty and lame people who heckle and criticize are. My friend Eric Edwards is in it. He watched the The DVD commentary. The director of the movie makes fun of his appearance. My friend Eric got heckled in the movie Heckler by the director of Heckler, thus self-proclaiming himself as a horrible person. Douche bag.

And now I'm criticizing a director of a movie that denounces criticism, in which he criticized someone who was denouncing criticism.

In conclusion, everyone is an asshole, and a total piece of shit. Oh! That reminds me. I still have to get to Bob The Human Piece of Fucking Trash Burke. It's my turn to criticize somebody.

So back to Las Vegas, the only highlight of my week being my friend who was working down the street (and who will go unnamed) texted me and told me he performed cunnilingus on a girl with a baby in her stomach on Friday night. I was very happy about the news. He was very ashamed.

Going downstairs to perform made me more and more and more sick as the week progressed. I didn't want to have to entertain people. Not the people they kept seating in the comedy club anyway. I would be so disgusted with myself as I walked into the showroom every night. I'd look at the scattered groups of old people and rejects wearing shorts and tank tops with extra skin and fat hanging off of every possible appendage, and I would get so depressed. I wanted to die. This was OK with these people. They were fine with themselves. This is what they wanted their lives to be like.

Every night I would walk off stage and think, "that wasn't so bad. I'm gonna' go get some fajitas." But every night when show time rolled around, I was completely allergic to performing (guess that's why I was always breaking out in hilarious jokes).

One night, as I walked down the old strip to buy a 32 oz. Miller High Life to go with my fajitas, this idiot was on the street shouting into a microphone. His voice carried on for blocks. The microphone kept popping as he SCREAMED into it, which made something that would have been merely tacky, absolutely unbearable.

He asked this 8 year old kid to walk up and talk to him. The kid said he was from Belize.

"Where is Belize?"

"Central America."

"Wow. Your English is really good."

Pop, pop,pop, pop.

"Thank you."

"Say Hello to everyone in Balizian (not a real word or language)."

"Hello."

"What language do they speak in Belize?"

"English."

Brilliant. Amplified ignorance. Not that I knew what language is spoken in Belize either, but at least I didn't advertise. And there lies the difference.

It was a weird work week even for a comedy club. We worked Thursday through Tuesday. Anyway, Tuesday night was a taping. I was supposed to sign a contract: A contract saying they could use footage from the show on their internet website. I didn't want to sign it. I hate signing contracts without my lawyer present, because A) he told me never to sign a contract without showing him first, and B) He told me never to sign a contract without showing him first. Those are the only 2 rules he has for me.

It'd be funny if he had other rules for me, like no running or I had to raise my hand before I said anything.

I did the show. It was fun. I got the check from Bob. You know Bob. He's the star of this story. He's Bob The Human Piece of Fucking Trash Burke.

Now Bob The Human Piece of Fucking Trash Burke, is a special kind of idiot. The kind of guy that actually looks like an idiot. It only takes one second to realize you're dealing with a complete imbecile. He looks like Randy Quade in Vacation, but shorter and without the self-confidence. He looks like he should be farming pigs for a living. He's not wearing overalls, but when you picture him in your mind, he's got them on anyway. Holding a pitchfork. But this moron, this idiot, this tragic dunce, this legally retarded dufus, in the end would make me out to be the fool.

I didn't see him most of the week. He didn't show up until the Sunday night show after I was completely over Vegas, and dying to go home.

"Hew is the rum?" He asked, meaning, "Do you like your hotel room?"

I laughed. "It's fine." That's all it was. Fine. Not that I cared. I'll sleep anywhere. But why even ask? He knows what the room is like. Every room in Fitzgerald's is exactly the same. Bland and smoked in.

"Hew were the shuhs?" Meaning, "How were the shows?

"Fine," I told him. Which was still a stretch.

That was the only moment we shared all week. And that was all the Bob Burke I needed for the rest of my life.

So I did the last show on Tuesday in front of the cameras and they weren't even taping me, and that was fine with me, and then it dawned on me, I could get paid and then take off without signing the contract.

Bob hands me a check.

"We youshly give ya cesh, but we're swetchin' bank counts rut nuh."

"That's fine." I said, grabbing the check. I don't want to walk around with cash anyway. It really was a shitty part of town. I've never seen so many bail bonds places in my entire life. Sexy places to buy bail bonds: Places with names like Goodfella's Bail Bonds, Godfather's bail bonds, pimps and players bail bonds. It was lovely. You had a chance to pick a brand of bail bond that suited the personality of your suddenly incarcerated friend or family member. Something that let them keep their identity, through the depersonalizing process of prosecution.

The whole time I'm just trying to get out of there without signing the contract. I felt like I was getting away with something huge.

"Ocean's 11!" I kept saying out loud with a smile.

I got in the car. I deposited my check at a nearby bank, and drove home to Los Angeles. I was off the road by 3am.

CHAPTER 2: The Fast and The Finances.

I went to the bank 6 days later and my balance was -136 bucks.

The check bounced.

I got on the phone with Bob The Human Piece of Fucking Trash Burke. He says it's because they just switched banks. He says another check is on the way.

I cashed the new check.

Do I have to tell you what happens next? Higher than a basketball.

I called Bob. He said he was going to deposit the money in my account that day.

Uh huh.

Why you lyin,' Bob? Why you hittin' yourself?

I called him all day Friday. He never called me back. I left him messages with polite words and threatening tones. He sent me an email saying he, "sent it today and should be there today or tomorrow." Now I couldn't get him to write me back or call me, but I've asked what he means by "sent it," as I thought he said he was depositing the money into my account. No response.

The last thing that he wrote me was that he was going to visit his son in the hospital and he wouldn't be able to answer his phone. Yeah. That goes without saying. Everybody knows phones don't work in hospitals. Anybody who's ever watched ER knows that.

Awwwwwwwwwwww! Poor Bob. His son is sick. So is my landlord's son.

PAY ME!

Chuck, the middle man, who hooked me up with this beautiful scenario didn't do much to help. He sent Bob and email. An email? Check out the big muscle on Chuck. I heard that's how the mob shows they mean business. Online. Emails are very threatening:

To: jimmythewop27@aol.com

From: sleepswiththefishes@yahoo.com

Subject: You take cara' that thing?

Dear Jimmy the Wop. Please send us that money you owe.

Sincerely,

Joseph "Crazy Joe" Gallo

(W) 212 345-4367

(C) 917 321-8346

Chuck intimidated Bob with this email (he sent me a copy):

"Bob....you're putting me in a shitty situation with all of these bounced checks?? "Working on it" just isn't cutting it. You need to go do this TODAY. These comics rely on their payments for services rendered, and this is causing YOU to look bad. I'm already starting to get calls/emails from other comics (who haven't even been there) saying the word on the street is that comics are getting stiffed with bad checks. It leads me to believe that you do not have the funds to cover these and are just dodging everyone? Otherwise, we wouldn't be having these conversations. It's not brain surgery here? Please take care of everyone TODAY!!!"

A word of advice to Chuck. Question marks at the end of sentences don't make you sound threatening. If Bob can even read, I'm sure he feels like he's being threatened by a valley girl or Matthew Perry.

I got my lawyer to call Bob. He told her he sent it.

I now had -675.00 dollars in the bank. An all time low. I've been broke for 10 years, but I've never had a negative bank account.

Just as sure as there are human pieces of trash that cover this planet, just like Bob The Human Piece of Fucking Trash Burke, there are also Saints who walk amongst us.

The first being my roomate who let me pay my half of the rent late. The second being the Improv who gave me a week at The Irvine Improv just because I asked for it. Another being John Pinette, who so generously gave me a bonus that week, and yet another: a club owner who gave me a full advance on a week I wasn't scheduled to do for another 2 and a half months.

Got to come in and watch Norm McDonald and eat free junk food while said manager cut me a check. Life sucks.

Another was my bank. While they date raped me repetitively with overdraft fees, they let me use my second checking account independently of the other one that was digging a hole to China.

By the middle of September, everything was back to normal.

I filed charges against bob The Human Piece of Trash Burke. They'll probably put him in jail. He wrote what I estimate to be about $30,000 in bad checks to various people that worked for him over a 2 or 3 week period.

I don't want that guy to go to jail. It's almost Christmas and I just want my money. Harm to him isn't gonna help me any.

I just want my money.

Then again, I might feel better if his cellmate beat the everloving Christ out of him.

I don't know.

I'm torn.

sábado, novembro 01, 2008 

I turned to Connor. 

"One day we'll be that good (at drinking)."

Soon the bartender was giving me free drinks as we talked about getting older, but still doing what you wanted to do with your life, even though you might not be incredibly successful.

One thing I was incredibly successful at was not taking a shit the entire train ride to NYC.  As I walked 15 blocks from the bar back to Jay's apartment, my run was over.  I had to piss and shit so bad my bladder and small intestine were pressed up against each other in my pelvis (do boys have pelvises?  If they don't, you still know which part of the body I'm talking about).

I made it to Jay and Kate's and evacuated the food particles that did not apply to my body.

I walked in the kitchen and Jay walked in the front door.

We went out on his porch and had a beer.  The sun came up.


I woke up the next day wearing all my clothes on the air mattress Kate had set up for me.  Me and Jay went and had some Mexican food.

I went and got my haircut.  I got my haircut at.......shit, I can't remember the name of it.  I just know where it is.  It's on 11th street between 5th and 6th ave.  Anyway I got my haircut there by an old guy in December '04.  I kept telling him not to cut it too short and he kept telling me, "You ain't never had your hair cut so good."

It looked bad for about 2 weeks, but once it grew in, Holy Shit!  It made me in love with myself.  Meanwhile, in May of '08,  my hair looked so bad, that I had been wearing a hat for the past week, and it somehow still looked ridiculous.

So I walked into the shop and the old guy was there.  A kid, about 20, offers to cut my hair.  I hate walking in and asking for a specific barber.  In a salon or whatever you call it, like Supercuts or Floyd's or Rudy's, I don't mind holding out for someone.  But Barber shops are so small, I can always tell they take it personal when you don't pick them (For more on this premise, checkout Jerry Seinfeld's little known NBC sitcom, called "Seinfeld," Season 5, Episode 8.  Ignore the dated references to Edward Scissorhands.  Try to figure out the other reference.  I think it's some sort of opera).

So I sat down in the chair.  Latest improvement to the shop:  A TV set.  Even better, they had it set to Fuel, and they were showing skateboarding.  I get to watch skateboarding while I get my haircut?  Perfect.  I'd watch no matter what.  I hate looking at myself while I get my haircut.  So much so that one chick at Rudy's in Los Feliz called me out.

"You hate getting your haircut, huh?"

"Yeah."

Thanks for making me even more comfortable.

But anyway, I'd settle for Days of Our Lives with the sound off just for the diversion, but skateboarding!?!?!?!?  I didn't even have to use my AK.

The kid just takes the clippers to my head and cuts everything in like 5 seconds.  I was like, "Oh this should look great.  Dude just spent an entire commercial spot cutting my hair.  How do you guys operate without appointments?"

Then the kid takes out the scissors and shapes it up to one of the best haircuts I've had in my life.  A little short, but I at least felt good enough to walk home without my hat.

I left for the show early.  I was nervous.  I always get nervous when I play a new place, even though I recorded one of the best sets of my life there for Live at Gotham.  It feels like it never even happened.  I don't remember the actual performance.  Shit went by quick and it was the only time I've ever performed there.

F Train, baby.  I wouldn't have it any other way.  I loved that I was taking the subway to work.  I felt like either one of my Grandfathers.  They used to work in the City.  For a week I was.  My mother used to work in NYC too.  But it's weird to feel like your mother.  Just doesn't come natural.  Somehow it made more sense to feel like 2 guys I barely knew.

I got to the gig early and went to Madison Square Park.  Just sat on a bench and relaxed.  Then everybody stopped walking all at once and the girl next to me reading a book stabbed herself in the neck with a hairpin.

No wait.  That was a disappointing movie I saw this summer.


I sat down on the bench next to a dude and a girl.  Soon these kids about 20 years old a piece with Afros and eighties thrift store summer clothes walked up and started playing with their red multipurpose ball.  They were playing catch across the fountain.  The fountain wasn't working so it was a big dirty city pond. 

This had to be the funniest thing going. Everyone in the entire park was laughing at these fools.  They'd throw the ball to each other, but they'd try to throw it short so it would fall in the water with enough momentum to splash the guy trying to catch the ball.  The water was so old and dirty it would surely leave the recipient of the splash with HIV.

I went in to do the show.  The house was full.  I ran into my friend Nick Griffin.  He was doing a guest spot on the show.  It was great to see him.  I've known him for 7 years now and I've always loved his comedy.

The show went very well.  Tons of fun.

I went to meet up with my friends Bobby Myamoto and Tom McCaffrey at a bar.  It was a good time.  Those guys are hilarious. Tom offered me a place to stay Saturday and Sunday night.  Respect.

Tom told me tons of hilarious stories including the fact that he tapes an episode of Best Week Ever on VH1 every single week, but they've never used any footage of him on the show.  He said he was hoping they would use him this week.

Got home late.  My train wasn't running.  I somehow figured out a train home, though I don't remember exactly what I did.

Friday, I woke up late, and hung out with Kate and Jay.  Me and Jay checked out shorts and stuff on the internet, including the shorts we'd both been working on.

Jay left for work, and I left super early.  2 hours later I saw Kate on the street by Gotham.  "Kate!" I shouted.  Then we hugged.  It's funny, if I saw her at her house we wouldn't even have shaken hands, but out on the street it's hug time.  That's just the way it is. Those are outdoor specifications.

I walked around a little bit more and saw that the band H2O was performing just down the street from Gotham in a theater.  I used to skateboard with Toby Morse and Todd Morse (the singer and the guitar player) when I was around 12 years old.  Toby was a legendary skateboarder in Saint Mary's County (where I'm from) (see: Not Baltimore) when I was a kid.  We were all from a very small town in Maryland.  Somehow in 2008 we were both performing at large venues in New York City.

Friday night's shows went ridiculously well.  So much fun.  Gotham is an incredible club.  The audiences ended up being great all week.  In fact, for the entire 2 week run, Miami and New York, every show was good.  That's rare like beef.

I stopped off for a meatball hero.  It was delicious like beef.

I got home late on Friday night.  I think I saw the sun come up.  Again I hung out with Jay on his porch, which is really a lower building's roof top.  He told me he did about 10 shots at work (He works at a bar, so just relax).  But you'd never known by looking at him or talking to him.

I woke up on Saturday morning and packed up my stuff.  I was supposed to meet my friend Daniel (Tosh, who I was opening for at Gotham) and his friend Kevin for pizza.  Jay gave me an umbrella.  Good thing.  It started raining as soon as I walked outside.  That's just something you don't even consider living in California.  That fact that it could just up and start raining.  It just never factors into anything out West.  But walking down Lincoln Plaza in Park Slope, it factored into everything.

I got to the subway in the pouring rain.  Made it to the general area of Daniel's hotel.  It was still raining.  As soon as I got to his street, it stopped.  Should have held out in the subway.

I got into his hotel.  He's like, "Are your feet wet?"

I was like, "Yeah."


"You want some socks?"

"Yeah."

"Your shoes'll still be wet though."

"No I got shoes in my bag."

I started digging through my suitcase.

He's like, "I don't understand.  You have shoes in there, but you don't have socks?"

Then it dawned on me.  I had socks in my suitcase too.

Daniel was nice to me and only made fun of me for the next 12 hours straight.  And every time he's thought of it since.

We went and had pizza.  It was delicious.

I headed up to McCaffrey's.  Tom's dad was out of town, so Tom was staying at his apartment.  It was in the apartment Tom grew up in and it was nice and big.

We hung out and talked shop and watched Saving Silverman.  It's a really good movie if you turn the sound down and talk over it.  I got ready and went to the show.  Both shows were fantastic.  Probably the best of the week.

Went back to Tom's.  We watched Stand By Me and talked shop. Tom finally made the cut on Best Week Ever.  We watched his clip a bunch of times.  It was hilarious.  He was so goddamn happy (as he should be).  Got a good night sleep.

Woke up quick, at about noon, just thought I had to be at Dunkin' Donuts soon.  Went to double D with Tom.  He was meeting this dude that was taking him upstate.  Tom had just recorded and stand up CD and they were going to the studio to edit it.

Tom gave me the key to his Dad's house and split.  I went to the apartment.  I tried to open the door, but it didn't work.  I could hear the neighbors next door.  They were loud.  I was scared they would come out and see me struggling with the door, so I split.  Tom's Dad has lived there for at least 35 years, and they'd know I didn't belong.  I'd be damned if I was going to try to explain what was going on.

I went outside and tried not to panic.  My phone was in the apartment.  Tom said I had to be there to let him in.  There was a security pass for the building.  He only had one.  So he'd be screwed if I didn't find him on the way in or had to leave for the show.

I calmed down a little bit, went back up and opened the door.  It's one of those ones you have to put tons of pressure on the key in order to open.  To do this you have to put absolutely no pressure on yourself.

Went to the show.  Nick Griffin was there.  Kevin Williams was there.  It was a party.  We all had good sets.  Kevin Williams walked off stage and as soon as he got over to me he held his arm up in a victory freeze frame like Judd Nelson in The Breakfast Club.  From my point of view the background was filled with people cheering.  It was cinematic bliss, without even having to go to the movies.

After the show we all went to dinner with some folks that worked over at Comedy Central.  I fucked up some buffalo wings.  They didn't even have a chance.  Everybody was egging me on to order another batch and then fuck those up too.  So then I ordered another batch and fucked those up too.                  Me and Daniel walked one the girls from Comedy Central home. 

"I can't wait to get home.  I've got a full tank of gas," Daniel broke a small period of silence.

This made me think of the empty tank I had inside my car a mile away from LAX.

"Damn."


I took a left at 20th.

"Call me if you don't make that flight!"

"I will."

I was flying standby and there was a possibility I would not be going home right away.  In fact, there was no time to rest.  I had to be at the airport in about 4 and a half hours to catch a flight, and if I wanted to pay my bills when I got home, I couldn't afford a cab.

Back at McCaffrey Manor, Tom tried to talk me out of taking the subway to the airport.  But every place I called wanted anywhere from 50 to 70 bucks.  McCaffrey also tried to talk me out of leaving at 3:00am, but I knew if I was taking the subway, I had to allow for error.  When you're filled with error, you have to allow for error.  Error will not allow for you. 

My favorite part of New York is the transportation.  It's so easy to use.  All you have to do is look at the map.  I don't live there or really understand it, but I can usually get to where I want to go for 2 dollars.   I got to the airport for 7.  7 effing dollars.  From The Lower East Side.

Left at 3am, walked to The L on 14th and 1st, transferred to the A, rode it to Howard Beach, JFK, took the shuttle.  Went through security and was at the gate at 5:30.  I was getting a sore throat from lack of sleep.          

I was so tired I couldn't stand being alive.  Then reality set in as it always does when I fly standby.  "I might not get on this plane."  That was very hard information to deal with, especially since the insides of my body were trying to escape to the outside of my skin

Got called to the gate for my standby ticket.  The lady at the counter got all these crazy arab names correct, but my first name, "Matthew," she couldn't even pronounce. 

"Math E."

Somehow that was my name.

I've never heard my first name pronounced wrong before.  No one can pronounce my last name.  One time I got off stage at the Fort Lauderdale Improv and the girl in the sound booth, goes "Keep it going for Matt Chevron."

Chevron.  She looked at the name "Fulchiron" written on a piece of paper and said to herself, "I bet this name is pronounced, 'Chevron.'"

I got on the plane.  It was a direct flight.  I don't remember it.  I'm sure I slept the whole time.

I was back in LA for most of June.  Ultimately, I shouldn't have gone to New York.  It was extremely stressful to coordinate, and cost more than I expected.

But if I didn't go, you'd have nothing to read while you were stuck at work.  And I just can't live with myself if you have nothing to do.

sábado, novembro 01, 2008 

My friend Forrest, a local Miami comic, agreed to give me a ride to The Amtrak station. He insisted I get directions printed up. I went to the rip off of a "business center" in the hotel I was staying at, and paid 10 dollars for directions and a map. The ridiculous prices bothered me. But it was still way cheaper than taking a cab.

Forrest came to get me around 9am. He's the boss at some kind of maritime operation. He and his employees try to save the.........what are they called? They look like whales, but they also look like seals. I can't think of what they're called. Well anyway, the fact that I can't remember is evidence they're fighting a losing battle.

It doesn't surprise me. Forrest isn't the least bit interested in helping this already forgotten creature. He left the office that morning without so much as clocking out, just to give me a ride to Amtrak.

I couldn't be any less beneficial to his government funded mission if I was out in The Atlantic killing the creatures with a spear. He was getting paid by Dade County to take me to the train station. Forrest just walks all over weak ass Dade County. He doesn't care how it makes Dade County feel. Poor Dade County. Forrest is a bully. Not to fret though. I hear Dade County just signed up for Karate classes. And Forrest agreed not to fight Dade County until the "All Valley" tournament.

I gave Forrest the directions. He looked them over briefly and told me they were no good. An hour later he got me there: 13 miles down the road. Good thing he asked me to give him the directions. How else would he be able to ignore them enough to take the longest way possible and get lost 3 times?

I got to the Amtrak station. There were no cars in the parking lot. It was in an industrial section of Miami.

I went inside. The first person I interacted with was an older dude coming out of the bathroom. "Excuse me," I said.

He looked at me like he wanted to kill me. He had every right to hate me. The way I was all showin' off with my manners and shit.

I went and got my ticket. I was an hour early. I sat down in a seat to wait for the train. I was already annoyed. The lobby had The Family Feud on the TV and it was unbearably loud.

"SURVEY SAYS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"

When did the survey start shouting?

A Mexican dude in front of me had an AM radio playing Mariachi tunes. A little girl was having a "conversation" with her father behind me.

"We goin' to Grandma's house!"

"You goin' ta' Gramma's house?"

"We goin' to Grandma's house!"

"You goin' ta' Gramma's house."

"We goin' to Grandma's house?"

"You goin' to Grandma's house!"

And so on, and so on, infinity. Conversations need direction. Ideas have to evolve. Sentences need to inspire new sentences, until the conversation can reach a point of mutual understanding, and then end. If the conversation is just a repetition of the same sentence, no progress will be made, and therefore the exchange will be infinite, and my patience will become extinct. It was too early in the trip for this. I was going to need my composure for the train ride.

Manatees! That's what they're called.

On the Wall were cardboard cutouts of superlatives. The signs were hand drawn, like something you would see on the wall when you were in kindergarten. The signs said things like, "Super!!!" "Hurray!!!" "Outstanding!!!" "Good work!!!!" "Wonderful!!!!" They should have been signs that said, "You fucked up! You're a loser! You travel in the worst way imaginable! Get a better credit card! You might as well be a citizen of a third world country!!!!!!!! Amtrak is for LOSERS!!!!!!"

Excuse me, wall!

The train came. We all got in a line. A lady asked me in some kind of Spanish accent if this was the train to New York. I told her it was. She was excited.

I got on the train. Picked out my seat. Our train attendant was a big black woman. She talked to us like she was a sergeant in the military.

"Now, Family! I call you that because for the next 30 hours, we are going to live together like we are a family."

I looked around the car. I didn't recognize anybody from Thanksgiving dinner, definitely not the guy with The Giants jersey and 16 pounds of bling around his neck.

Our guide walked up and down the aisle yelling at us about the bathroom she knew we were inevitably going to destroy.

"When you use the bathroom! Do not throw paper towels in the toilet! Do not leave the water running! If you run the water too much, we will not have enough to get us up to New York! I have never seen this many people get on the train this early in the Miami to New York trip!"

Fine. I knew to turn the water off when I was finished washing my hands. I knew to throw trash in the trash. That was perfectly acceptable to me. I've been through similar scenarios every single day of my life, for you see, I've always lived in CIVILIZATION. I've always been a member of SOCIETY.

I went to bed. I went to chair.

"Ticket!"

Somebody was shaking me. You have got to be joking. The conductor shook me to wake me up. Did he ask to see my ticket? No. Did he tap me on the shoulder and say, "excuse me?" No. He just shouts, "Ticket!" and then shakes me.

Like I'm not a paying customer. Like I didn't spend legitimate US currency to get on board. This is the conductor. This is how the conductor acts. He needed to conduct his motherfucking hands off of me. Is that even legal?

"I've made a huge mistake," I said to myself like I was a character in the TV show, 'Arrested Development.'"

I slept for an hour or so. Then I got up to go to the bathroom. I'm standing there pissing and the stream is going back and forth all over the toilet bowl. I'm like, "This bitch is going to kill me if she sees her bathroom is messed up." So I picked up a paper towel and wiped off the seat.

I went back and sat down.

You had to make reservations if you wanted to eat in the dining car. I did so.

At 6:00pm, I walked in and sat down. They brought me a menu. There were 8 booths and about 6 of them were empty.

I was sitting there thinking about how relaxing it was to see the country this way and enjoy a nice meal, when the waiter sat an old lady across the table from me. They didn't sit her in any of the many empty booths. They sat her across from me. Not next to me. 4 feet away from me, face to face, so we had nothing to do but stare at each other.

Inhale. Sigh.

I think she must have asked to sit with me or something. Like she didn't want to be alone. I'd have to be a real asshole to say I didn't want to sit with her, right? I would have to go out of my way to get out of the situation. I would have to call someone over and say, "I don't want to sit with this woman." I'd have to point right at her. It would be 6 different kinds of rude.

Even if I did it behind her back, she would still know I made the huge effort to have her removed from my booth. She would also know I did it just because I could not bear the simple act of sitting across from her. Keep in mind, I could sit next to her all day, but face to face? 1 minute was an eternity.

I didn't want to sit with her. I didn't want to talk to anybody. And this woman? This woman was somebody.

We talked a little bit about how nice it was to take a train. She was going to South Carolina. We were pleasant enough to each other. But there were long periods of silence. I kept looking around the car. Most of the booths were still empty. It didn't make any sense. Anyway, I know I'm a baby. I know I'm a brat, but it ruined my dinner. I couldn't enjoy it. Felt like a first date with an old lady. You know the tension. You can never figure out when to make your move.

On the way back to my seat, the cool kids tried to get me to join their cool crew. This girl told me she liked my hat. I guess I was supposed to stop and talk about it. I just told her it was from Target and kept moving. She said something about that being "alright." I wasn't apologizing for it. I just didn't know what else to say about it.

I went back to my seat, but this woman had her ass in it. Not only that, she had all of her stuff spread out next to her on the other seat. Great. I tried to sit next to her. She made the most mild attempt in the history of common courtesy to move everything, but she wasn't even putting a dent in the pile of suitcases and bags she had stacked up past the top of her head. I let her off the hook and just sat next to another older lady across the aisle.

This woman I sat next to was in her forties or fifties. It was the same woman that asked me hours ago if the train was going to New York.

She told me she was from Ecuador and currently enrolled in an English class. She asked me to check her homework for any grammatical errors. There were plenty. But how could I correct it without changing what she wanted to say? It was all kinds of gibberish. There were "sentences" like:

"The squirrel run over by where I won't not how."

So then I'd correct it with, "The squirrel ran over next to where I was. I'm not sure why."

Is that what she was trying to say? No. Probably not. But what she wrote wasn't correct or resembling any kind of reality. I had to get that squirrel doing something comprehendible. I didn't know what to do. I just kept trying to change her words into something that made sense. She kept writing more pages and then handing them to me.

She had begun writing about an angel. I "corrected" it and handed it back to her.

At this point it was dark out and the lights in the train went out. She panicked. I reached up and turned on her overhead light. She was grateful.

Then she handed me her notebook again to proofread, aka rewrite completely. I started to wonder how long this was going to go on for. Then in her notebook she had written about how the lights went out and her "angel" had turned it back on. I felt like such a dick. I was the angel. Did she want me to respond or make a comment about this? I never acknowledged the fact that she was writing about me.

Then she told me it was a poem. Damn it! She should have told me that before. I was correcting it and making it into coherent sentences when it could just as easily be random statements and phrases. Whoops. Hope I didn't screw up the poem.

I sat down at another seat in the row behind the lady working on her homework and started reading Factotum by Charles Bukowski. It was fantastic. I was truly enjoying it. The woman would still hand me the notebook. And I'd still correct it for her. But mostly I just read my book and it was nice and relaxing. It was nighttime and things were winding down and growing quiet.

Across the aisle was the middle aged woman sitting in my seat. She had the whole thing reclined with the legs section elevated, and she was scrawled out across both the chairs. I didn't care. I had a row to myself at the moment.

Then the con-dick-tor came by and told me to get back in my seat. I pointed to the lady who was sitting in it. She was now lying down, occupying both seats.

He starts tapping her with an open hand, practically hitting her, then shaking her going, "Excuse me! Excuse me! Scoot over please."

Please? The word "please" does not belong anywhere near the rest of that scenario.

The woman never took the blanket off of her face. She just sat up, now only occupying one seat. She immediately fell back asleep.

Meanwhile there were tons of places to sit on the car. The conductor was just being a pain in the ass. I got in the seat, which really wasn't even my original seat. She was still in it. I turned on the light. I didn't want to ruin this lady's sleep, but I wasn't tired and wanted to read my book. At least I wasn't punching her in the face like the guy in charge. Eventually I fell asleep around 4 in the morning. I woke up around 2 in the afternoon.

As soon as I came to, the lady next to me apologized for being in my seat. I told her I didn't care. She never looked up to see who was beating the Hell out of her the night before, and thought that the conductor shaking her was me. That I was harassing her like that. Ha ha! I can't even imagine doing that.

I don't remember too much about the rest of the day. I do know I went to the snack bar when the train was stopped and the guy behind the counter was bitching out anyone who asked for something.

Somebody would ask for a beer. He'd get it for them, and then when they handed him a bill, he'd shout, "I don't have any change!" Then he'd point to the cash register and be like, "The electricity's out!"

This would confuse anyone. You gotta' say something before you serve the food.

So there were a million people standing around waiting to order, or worse yet, pay for what they already had in their hands.

As soon as the electricity came back on he'd get so pissed, shouting, "Next!" But nobody knew who was next because there was no room for a line. It was just people crowded around his counter.

"Next! NEXT!!! COMEON!!!!!!!!"

This guy was a sweetheart. A true prince. A man with people skills. It's weird that he ended up being a snack bar clerk on an Amtrak train, and not the CEO of Microsoft. It's all politics, man. Red tape.

I also remember this lady sitting behind me, coughing on me the whole way there. 30 hours of coughing. Nonstop. The back of my head was soaking wet.

As we passed through Trenton, it was time to talk politics. Our train attendant out of nowhere just starts blabbing about how it doesn't matter who is elected president. I knew exactly where it was going too.

"It don't matta' who get elected president. Only one person matters................"

Can you guess who it is, readers? I'll give you a hint. He's been dead for almost 2000 years and he lives in your heart.

".........Jesus."

No shit. I thought she was going to say Tom Wopat.

She's like, "You ever wonder how you gonna eat? You look in the refrigerator and you like, 'how my gonna eat?' Then you wake up in the morning and there's food in the fridge?"

3 people were like, "Yes!"

Yes? If I were to respond, my answer would sound more like, "no." That has absolutely never happened to me. Never once. It definitely explained why this woman was so far from petite. Jesus grew food in her refrigerator whenever she was low on funds. I would love free magic food. I can't stand the hustle and bustle of the grocery store.

If only those starving kids in Africa would just say a prayer to Jesus Christ. Then they would have food in their refrigerators every morning when they woke up. But those stubborn little jerks only worship their false, made up Gods, like Zebras and Coca Cola bottles. They should just wise up and send praise to the God with the correct name. Then they'd be fat little piggies like us.

We pulled into Grand Central Station 2 hours behind schedule.

I climbed up the stairs to the regular part of the subway. I bought a subway card on debit. This lady who didn't speak English was handing me cash. She wanted me to buy her one too. I didn't want to get involved.

I got on a train headed towards Brooklyn. I think it was an A or a C. I didn't really know what I was doing, I just knew I had to get to an F to get to Park Slope to where I was going to stay. My plan was to get off at every stop and see if I could find a transfer to the F.

It only took 2 stops.

I got on the F, and sat down. It was no accident that I got to be the caretaker of Colonel Walter E. Kurtz's memory, anymore than being back in New York City was an accident. There is no way to tell his story without telling my own. And if his story is a confession, then so is mine..

I got off the train in Park Slope. I walked to my friend Jay Larson's apartment, fully aware of the contrast between an Amtrak car I had just spent 30 hours in and the infinite architecture and energy of New York City.

I got to Jay's. I pushed on the buzzer. Kate, Jay's girlfriend buzzed me up, but I didn't realize I had to make it passed 2 buzzing doors to get in. So I buzzed again and got up.

I walked upstairs. Jay was at work. Kate was making dinner and gave me a warm welcome. She made me some fish that she had just baked and opened me a beer. Perfect. We watched a basketball game. Celtics versus Detroit. I'm not into sports at all, so when I watch it I have to find a team to root for if I want to find any kind of interest in it. I decided to root against Boston.

I just went to Boston and everyone there seemed like a dickhead. At one point me and my friend Daniel were walking down the street in February in Boston. This dude in shorts, pretty normal looking (besides the shorts), walks up to the both of us, looks right at me, and shouts, "Fuck you!"

Without missing a beat, me and Daniel both go, "Fuck you," and start to walk again. I have to say the timing was perfectly executed by both parties. You could almost hear the director yelling, "cut."

Anyway, I'm sitting in Kate's apartment in Park Slope and I'm rooting for Detroit. Secretly. In my head. She's Jay's girlfriend. She's gotta root for Boston. Jay's all about Boston. Even though later during my stay, Jay would confess to me that he's not actually from Boston. He's from a small town in Massachusetts.

People do that all the time. They'll tell you they're from the city just so they don't sound like a hick. I should do that. I always say I'm from Southern Maryland. People always go, "Baltimore?"

No. If it was Baltimore, I would have said Baltimore. People always wanna know where you're from. I've never asked anyone where they're from. Who gives a fuck? Most people are predictable as all Hell. Most people think it's good to ask run of the mill questions just to get a conversation going. Conversations are ALWAYS unnecessary. Opening my mouth to answer things I don't care about is a chore equivalent to digging a hole to the center of the universe with a popsicle stick. But that's just me. I'm a brat.

One time on an airplane, a couple sitting next to me brought their baby with them. The man (with a ponytail) (Yes, that's correct. A ponytail) was in the middle seat, the woman had the aisle with the baby on her lap, I had the window. Did I mention it was 2006 and this dude had a ponytail? It would have been so funny if the baby had a ponytail too. But this was not a scene from Airplane 3. It was real life: Painful, miserable, real life.

Pony Tail told me he had just asked the flight attendant if I could move to another seat so his baby could have mine. Great. I'm paying for your little mistake to have his own seat? I have to get up from where I'm sitting because you forgot to stop at the drug store?"

I don't even know this kid. I wouldn't even want to. He looks as dull as a pencil eraser. He probably doesn't even have any cool stories. He looks like he doesn't even have one thought in his entire undeveloped and soft little head.

The flight attendant came back looking at me and said, "If you want to sit in the back, you can go ask the lady sitting in the last row."

I told everyone (who were all now looking down the aisle towards me) (again, it would be funny if the baby had a ponytail and was looking at me as well) that I wasn't asking the lady in the last row anything. It wasn't my idea to switch seats, and I didn't necessarily want to sit there. The flight attendant told me she would go ask. At this point, it was for the best. I didn't want to sit with the baby and the yuppie couple anyways, especially since I was now officially unwanted. The tension would surely be there for the rest of the trip. I told myself if it was an aisle or a window, I'd take it.

Pony Tail could tell I hated his living follicles, and for some reason thought he should comb things over.

"Where are you from?"

What? What? What?

Why do you care where I'm from, Pony Tail? This is the end of our relationship. Hopefully we'll never see each other again.

I'm from the window seat. I'm from Nobabyland. I'm from Idon'tunderstandyourproblemsbecauseIhaventmanagedtoruinmylifewithoffsprington. Have you been there lately? The responsibilities are very slim this time of year.

This was how he chose to defuse the situation, by the way. This is my reward: A conversation with HIM. Wow! I'm so lucky.

He thought he'd treat me to my least favorite thing in the world. Small talk. Pointless banter from someone I couldn't even stand to look at.

"Maryland," I told him, staring hard at him through evil eyes, unable to hide my sheer hatred for him.

"Baltimore?"

"No," I told him, staring at his idiot face, mine tight enough to make diamonds between my lips. If I was from Baltimore, I would have said Baltimore.

I took the seat. It was an aisle. Looking back I should have stuck around. But fuck 'em. I didn't need to prove a point. I just wanted to get away from the 2 morons who proved the dumbest point of all: They showed to the world she was fertile and he was potent. Congratulations. You just achieved what I've avoided my entire life. I'm very impressed. You have accomplished what billions of people do every day on accident. Front page news.

So, back in New York, I finished my dinner and headed out into town.

I hit the road. I took the F train to Gotham, just to check out the commute so I wouldn't be stressed about it the next day during rush hour. Found it. I had about 4 or 5 hours to kill before Jay got home. I called my girlfriend. I walked around. I rode the train back to Brooklyn.

Actually before I even went to Manhattan, I stopped in at Harry Boland's, an Irish Pub I used to drink at, back when I lived in Park Slope for a month.

This was back in 2004. I had quit my job at a video duplication place. I was worn out after years and years of working during the day and doing stand up at night. I had income here and there, but not much.

I got 2 gigs on the East Coast. One in New Jersey and one in Pennsylvania. Scranton, PA, I think. I can't remember. They didn't pay much, but I figured I'd go. And while I was figuring that, I figured I'd move to New York and stay with my friend Carolyn until I got the ball rolling.

Not much happened. I did open mics. Did The Cellar at like 5:30 in the afternoon in front of 6 other comics. A year and a half later, when I was on Last Comic Standing, one of the other comics that was there emailed me to say "what's up?"

I did The Village Lantern. I hung out with my friend Tom McCaffrey and watched him kill it at shows. Mostly The Village Lantern.

I couldn't find a job. Looking for a job always depresses me so much that I lose all confidence in looking for a job. Me and Carolyn went to Harry Boland's quite a bit. We also went to Uncle Lao's, Daisy's Diner, and Ray's Pizza all the time. Before I left California, I was swimming laps everyday in the sunshine. One month in New York and the most unhealthy meals on the planet were doing the backstroke in my gut.

I ended up going back to LA and taking my old job back. I didn't even do the gigs that I had lined up for January. I just ended up in the same place I was when I quit a year prior. I could have saved myself a gang of trouble and just stayed at my old/new job. But when I'm treading water at a day job, I never understand how great it is just to be able to pay my bills on time. It feels like a luxury to pay rent whenever I first go back to work after being unemployed. Then I break even for a couple of months and start to realize that I'm wasting every second of my life just so I can afford to be alive. I love being an adult. It's a lot different than being an indentured servant.

I made the right choice though. As soon as I came back to California, I became a regular at The Comedy Store, started working The local Improv's again, and by the end of the year performed at The HBO Festival in Las Vegas, and did my first TV spot on The Craig Ferguson show, eventually leading to other TV shows, and so much road work that the duplication company had to let me go for never being able to make it to work.

Anyway, anytime I'm ever in New York is a good feeling because my reference point for New York is failure, misery, and the cold of December. I came back once to tape Live at Gotham, less than a year and a half after my failed attempt at living there. Every other time I come back it's so I can work a club or a college. So by association, I feel like I should be poor and miserable, but then I'm not, which makes it great on a couple of different levels. It just feels like, "Hey, remember when life absolutely fucking sucked? Well now it's only blows every other week!"

Anyway, I went to Harry Boland's and had a 6 dollar beer. Way to keep to the budget. When I got back to Brooklyn from Manhattan, I went to another bar me and Tom McCaffrey used to go to. It was just me, the lesbian bartender, and 2 other guys. One guy was trying to drink himself to death, while one guy was talking band talk to the bartender.

It was nice to sit there quietly and let them hash it out. Whenever I'm around comics (every single night) I have to talk shop ("How'd you get that?" "Who books that?"). It was nice to hear the alternate universe gab about bookings, business, and politics, mostly because I didn't have to say anything.

At one point the drunkest guy stood up. It took him 3 or 4 seconds to get his balance together. He looked around the room. He spotted the exit. He walked towards it. But it was kind of a herky jerky Herman Munster walk. The entire transaction looked like it was being performed by a toddler.

Me and Bright Eyes watched him walk out. He made it all by himself.

segunda-feira, dezembro 03, 2007 
I've had a good year. Made more money than ever before, got rid of the day job, put room on my credit cards and everything. Having said that, I also spent 3 months homeless.

Wrote a song about it. Wanna' hear it? Here it go:

For 2 years I stayed in a small guest hose in Echo Park with this guy I went to college with 8 years prior. We were both grown ass men with roomates, which meant we had both fucked up somewhere long the line.

One day I came home from a show in Virginia. Eric, my roomate, walks in my room and says, "Matt, buddy. I'm gonna have to ask you to move out."

What? Seriously? I was gone 2 weeks every month, but still paid my half of the rent, always on time. He claimed I was messy. In my room, I was, but I was good about the common area.

I didn't even care that bad about being kicked out. Granted, I didn't know what I was gonna do, but I did just get a good paycheck and I was tired of being stuck in that small-ass house. It's like they say, "Everytime God closes a door, he........." I don't know the rest of the saying, I always start thinking about how fucked I am every time someone's in the middle of quoting it to me.

I did hate living there though. Every time dude picked his nose I could hear it. Every toss and turn in his bed. I'd always dreamed of my own place.

Besides, I figured I was wasting money being out of town so much and paying rent. I was better off finding somewhere else and avoiding rent in the meantime.

That's just basic hustlenomics.

Back to our very awkward conversation, "How's June?" I said at the same exact second he said,

"I'm thinkin' May."

I saw my boy Jay Larson at The Comedy Store soon after, probably that night. He told me all his roomates were out of town working on that Brett Michaels reality show, "Brett of Hearts" or whatever. Jay said I could stay there for the month, starting immediately for $300.

Now at the time, Jay was living in a Mansion: a 3 story house in the Hollywood Hills, or Burbank Hills. It was on the East side of the Cahuenga Pass. Now I'm in for a measly $300 bucks immediately.

Huh-ha! What's up, Eric? You want me out in May? How's APRIL work for ya'? Have fun paying $1500 for rent tomorrow, Bitch! How you like me now? Don't seem that messy all of a sudden, I bet.

Then I ran into my boy Matt Hummel at the Stove Piper in Van Nuys. I was braggin' about staying at a mansion for 300 bucks. he tells me, both his roomates are out of town and I can stay at his house for FREE.

Oh schnapp! Let's do that. Let's do free.

So life's going pretty swell. My first rent free week I'm performing at the Comedy and Magic Club with my boy Nick Griffin, and who else is on the bill? Just Gary Shandling. That's all. Free steaks and doing comedy with one of my friends and all time favorites Nick Griffin, plus one of the guys who inspired me to do stand up comedy in the first place. No big deal. Just watching my childhood dreams unfold in front of my very eyes. It happens to everybody.

Then after staying at Matt's for a week, Jay calls me up and tells me I can stay at the mansion for free.

Make 'em say Uh! Uh! Nuh-na, nuh-na! Nuh-na, nuh-na!

So this homeless thing is the best situation on the planet: No rent and ridiculous living conditions. The mansion was fantastic. It was right above Universal Studios off of Barham, on the way from the 101 heading east to Burbank. Holy Schnikeys! It was fantastic.

It was so nice to wake up every morning in such a beautiful house with such an amazing view. Now I understand why successful people are so happy every time you run into them. Even the weather was nicer up there. God loves the rich. He whispers in their ear every morning, "You're special. You're my favorite. You deserve it all."

It wasn't at all like busted-ass Echo Park. Cars up on cinderblocks, Vatos running garage businesses out of their homes, dog fights in peoples' front lawns. I hated that place from the day I moved in. In this age of praise and reverence for Silverlake, people will always go so far as to say Echo Park is nice. Yeah, if by nice you mean 3rd world, then yeah, it's nice. The mayor of Echo Park made me a mayonaise sandwhich the day I moved in. It's that ghetto.

Meanwhile back at the ranch, I was loving it. The best part was I had known Larson for years, but we always lived so far away from each other. We were crazy good friends, but only really hung out at comedy shows. We got some time to chill. Nice weather too. Nice time of year.

Me and Jay would write and run errands, do separate shows at night, then come back and compare stories. We ate a lot of In and Out hamburgers. It was like fight club, but without all the punching. Jokes. Joke Club.

Jay left the key for me under a peice of slate by the front door. Anybody could have walked in and lived the same life of luxury. But it was a nice neighborhood, so nobody bothered breaking in. They had their own charmed lives to live. I worked a lot on the road a lot that month, but was always back for part of the week. Taped an episode of Comics Unleashed that month too.

Then Jay's roomates came home. I had to be out.

I went and stayed on my friend Ryan's couch which turned out to be tons of fun. We watched The Office (British) and laughed about all kinds of stuff. The only bad thing about this was I didn't have my own room, and Ryan's bathroom was in his bedroom, so I had to coordinate my pisses with his sleep schedule or go outside and piss in the LA river. Next time you're out at a resturant in Southern California, please enjoy your tap water. Whenever I was out there pissing or brushing my teeth, I was always scared I'd run into a real homeless person. Or if a car came by and I was brushing my teeth, I knew it just looked insane to whoever was in the car.

I was on the road a lot. Went to Reno, and on the way back I stayed at my Uncle's house in Marin County. That was nice. I love my Aunt and Uncle, they actually treat me like family. Which sounds stupid cause they are family, but they're crazy hospitable and act like I'm one of their own kids.

I was gonna wear out my welcome there: just stay. I was out of work till the end of June and that was in Northern California. I called my old day job and they told me they had a temporary project for me to work on. I used to vault videotapes and other types of media for a dub house in Santa Monica. I figured I should make some money. Plus I had a show booked at The Improv I should probably go do. That's 8 dollars and fifty cents right there.

At this point I was staying at The Jolly Roger Hotel on Washington and Abbot Kinney. It's 300 bucks a week. Plus 60 dollars tax. They don't tell you about the 60 till you're checkin' in.

So this wasn't a bad hook up. Staying in Venice, working in Santa Monica. The reason I felt bad about it was my parents called me to chat and I could tell my mother was not diggin this lifestyle at all. Plus my brother had quit his job, so her blood pressure was probably through the strateosphere.

That week, my episode of Comics Unleashed aired. I watched myself on TV in my weekly hotel room. The Hollywood Dream is false advertising. Do you pesky kids believe me now?

Then I changed the channel. My ex-girl was on NYPD Blue. I was on location for an episode of Cops.

The next week, I stayed at my friend Randy's. He and his Missus were off on their Honeymoon and I was the best man at the wedding 7 months prior, so bam! Whatta you know? Full Charge is in business one more week.

After that I had a 2 day gig at the La Jolla Comedy Store. I went down a day early and stayed a day late. A million dollar beach front condo. Another dope homeless hook up. Thank you India. Thank you terror. Thank you Mitzi Shore.

Back to LA. Back to Ryan's couch. I had no stand up work for the next 3 and a half weeks, but I had stumbled into one of the most interesting money making scenarios of all time.

See when my old boss hired me back, he hired me on for a temporary project and then got a new job at a huge production company that week, thus creating the most George Costanza situation I've ever been in.

He comes up to me and tells me, "You'll probably be done with this [temporary project] in a week. My last day is Friday. Just keep comin' in until they tell you not to anymore."

(Sung) My baby takes the morning train.

I milked that shit for 2 months. All I did was use their internet and phone to coordinate my own stand up schedule. They were paying me to be my own assistant. Then when I missed a week to do some extra work, the main boss caught wind of it (I never told them I was taking a week off, since I didn't have a boss at my location anymore). I guess somebody told on me, or they called for me when I wasn't there, but when I came back they said I had until my road gig the next week and then the job was over. Fine. It was already longer than I expected, and I was bored out of my mind.

Then when I got back, they asked me to stay permanently. I worked like 8 days in July before they asked me to stop coming in at all and by that time I was well into August. I was on the road so much at that point. But I refused to quit. I wanted to see how long I could keep my free money scenario. I went in usually about noon the days I was in town. Usually left for 2 or 3 hours to go to an audition and then usually left at around 5. Tough life.

Ryan's apartment was tons of fun. I hadn't seen him in a long time, so it was cool to hang out with him and watch him pick fights with his roomate for my entertainment. One time I was going to make some spaghetti at like 2 in the morning and his roomate was like, "I'll make you some good sauce."

He grabs the sauce, pours it in the pot and just starts pouring sugar straight out of the bag. Like a lot. Like a steady stream for a couple of seconds. One Mississippi, two Mississippi, three Mississisppi........ I swallowed my own frustration. Ryan looked at me and just started laughing.

Chris gave me the spaghetti and just went in his room. I sat down next to Ryan to eat it. He was laughing in my face. The spaghetti tasted regular. But I couldn't eat it because I couldn't stop thinking about how much sugar was in it. It was store bought spaghetti sauce, so it already had tons of sugar to begin with. It wasn't like he started from scratch.

I put the spaghetti back in the strainer, and washed of the sauce off of the noodles. Ryan has spent the last 6 months busting Chris' balls for this shit. I was just straight embarrassed. I was staying in dude's house. I didn't want to disrespect him in the least.

Anyway, at this point I was starting to feel like a loser. I knew I needed to be responsible for myself. Oh yeah, plus Ryan was having company over. It was time to get a place of my on. Only problem, I didn't have enough for a security deposit anywhere.

This kid everyone calls The Great One, has couch surfed and weekly hoteled it for years, so I asked him where I should stay. He told me about this place called The Cecil Hotel.

He said not to let the people outside sway me, the inside is nice and it only costs $250 a week.

I pulled up to the Cecil Hotel. It's only a couple blocks from skid row. I'd finally made it! I got out my cell phone. I decided immediately I was going back to The Jolly Roger. Those were jolly times and I wanted them back.

The dude on the phone told me it would be 400 something for the week. The price went up. I didn't have that on me. The Cecil was gonna have to do.

I found a parking spot on the other side of the block. This old black dude immediately walked up to my passenger side window. I shook my head "no" meaning I wasn't selling anything, nor did I need anything.

I walked past a bar with an open door. Shit looked rough.

I made it past like 5 homeless people and 3 thugs to get through the front door. Got through the metal detector and the sign in sheet that no one was manning.

The lobby was beautiful. Tall ceilings. Paintings all over the wall. You could tell it was the shit back in 1925. But in 2007, it was just shit.

I asked the lady behind bulletproof glass for a weekly room.

"Do you want a bathroom or no bathroom?"

That's what they ask you when you check in at The Grand Hyatt.

"Bathroom, please." I'm accustomed to shitting in a toilet. Call me pampered, but I hate wearing pampers.

It was 50 bucks extra for your own toilet, but under the circumstances, I'd say it was well worth the money.

I was in room 1219. The key's got a huge red plastic tag with your room number right there on it. It's also got the address. Thanks Cecil. They might as well write: "If you find this key please go to 640 S. Main Street, enter room 1219 with the key provided, and take Matt's other outfit."

I went up the elevator, just hoping not to run into anybody. I got to the 12th floor. Got out. The hallway was beautiful. I gotta tell you, I loved the architecture. It was just worn out.

I got in my room. I immediately rolled up the bedspread and threw it the closet. "Don't come out until you admit you're gay."

Bedspreads in hotels are always filthy, but this thing probably had heroin addict jizz on it. It was a small room, with a sink and a mirror. They had a TV with cable and a bathroom with a shower and toilet. It didn't look like 50 bucks worth, but I bet it would have if I went just one night with the community shower option.

I set my alarm for 7:50am and looked for some change. I had to start feeding the meters at 8:00am. I got to sleep alright. I woke up to the heat of California summer and the madness and the sound of any downtown workday 12 stories below.

I grabbed some change and went downstairs into the street full of businessmen and riff raff. I fed the meter.

On the way back up I was in the elevator with a kid about 25 in a full running suit. He looked exhausted.

"How you doin?" He asked me.

"Good. How you doin?" I asked him back.

"Just getting' by."

Of course. I'm sure anybody there was just getting by. Anybody with enough money for a month's worth of rent was somewhere else. He got off around the 8th floor.

I went back to bed. Got back up, went back downstairs to feed the meter, went back up to my room, took a shower, and then left for work. It was hard to believe I was employed and also working comedy clubs at night. I felt like such a bum, but I was working my ass off.

I went to work, and then went to The Comedy Store. I was scheduled for late spots at The Store all summer, like 12:15-12:30am, which was really like 1:00-1:15am, which at this point, was perfectly fine with me. The less time I spent at "home," the better.

I got back late. Somewhere between 1 and 2am. Walking from the sidewalk to the hotel is the hardest part. You get straight up mobbed by people looking for money. Like you're carrying a large pizza through Sudan, or Bagdad, or Downtown LA.

I mean of course I have money right? I'm in the same neighborhood as you, Jackasses. You're not catching me at the bottom of my driveway in Bel Air. You're bumrushing me at the front door of my weekly hotel.

Some people think if you're white, the government automatically drops a couple grand in your bank account on the daily.

One night I stopped for a beer and some chips on the way home. Salt and vinegar. Bitter times call for bitter snacks.

I parked around the block, put my chips on the roof of my car, then in my backpack. This dude walks up to me all shady. It feels like there's not one light on in the whole city. There's no one else on the street. Just me and dude.

Please don't talk to me.

"Hey man, can I have some change?"

"Nah man."

He's like, "You got any chips?" with attitude, like, "I KNOW you got some chips, Bitch."

Yeah, I got chips. Bought some just in case I ran into anyone on the way home. That way I'd have something to give a stranger for free.

Whatever happened to "please?" This guy had no strategy.

I'm like, "Nah."

He's like, "whatta you a magician?"

No but, my exroomate is. This Spring he made my house disappear.

I get what this guy was tryin' to say. He was sayin' he saw the chips and that he knew I had 'em. But magician? That was a stretch. The guys' gotta have a better line than that. It's just slightly off the mark. A bully should say something more biting.

I pointed down the street. "5-0"

He looked. I took off into the safety of light on the cross street.



Hey should have said, "What're you an escape artist?" I'd have given him that one.

It was a long day and I rested well that night. Nothing helps me fall asleep faster than hearing, "Yo bitch! Yo bitch! Get back here! Get back here, bitch!" 12 stories below. My mother used to sing me a lullabye with similar lyrics.

I always wore shoes on inside. I hated touching the floor with my barefeet. I started washing my hands more than Howard Hughes. I began to notice blood stains on the carpet. I started to wonder if anyone had ever been murdered in the 20 square foot radius that I was sitting in (Definitely some prostitution).

It was bad enough I was down and out, now I had to worry about ghosts. I thought I heard some that night. They were very judgemental too. They were like:

"Yoooouuuu're a loooooooooser."
"Yoouuuuuu wasted your college degreeeeeeeeeeeeee."
"Time to move back in with your pareeeeeeeents."

Haunting.

I was drinking the tap water too. I was starring in my first feature length movie. "Death Wish 6." If karma is anything, I drank my own piss that I deposited into the LA river from when I stayed at Ryan's.

I didn't work during the day that weekend, and I didn't have many shows those 2 days either, so I spent a lot of time at The Cecil going over my jokes, setting up my financial plan (if I can just live off of a jar of peanuts for a month.......), and figuring out when it was time to pull the plug and move back to Maryland.

The lonliest moment was when I could see 2 cute girls and an musician type dude, hanging out in the window across the alley. They were listening to music and talking. It did make me feel a little more normal that not everybody there was a deadbeat. It's not hard to figure they were all probably on hard drugs though. But what do I know? Maybe they were comics too. I doubt it.

The weirdest thing happened to me that Saturday. I parked my car. I noticed outside the bar next to my hotel two big fat black women were being questioned by two different cops. The women were screaming and yelling. I looked both ways before I crossed the street. I moved past the situation thanking Christ I had an education, when Officer Martinez called me over.

I was thinkin', "what the fuck? I didn't see any of this shit go down. You saw me just pull up".

I got up close. The chick nearest me was hysterical and shouting. From what I gathered, the two of 'em got in a fist fight in the bar and when the cops broke it up, they found some weed on one of 'em.

Now what's strange is they were trying to figure out who's pot it was right there on the sidewalk. I'd a thought you take 'em down to the station and sort it out, but apparantly you just let the two drunk bitches scream and yell at each other over their respective cop's shoulder until someone gives in 8 hours later. I imagine there's a lot of hugging involved and declarations of true love. God bless you alcohol. You've done it again.

So the cop goes, "Where you live?" I told him I lived at The Cecil Hotel. He goes:

"Is there a reason you crossed against a red?"

I'm thinkin', "What? What does that have to do with Nell Carter's sisters battling it out on the streets?" I realized he meant I crossed the street when I didn't have the "walk" sign.

I thought for a second.

"Not a good one," I said, not even trying to be a smart Alec. What excuse could there possibly be?

He wrote me a ticket. Dick! Bizarro world was no place for a white person.

He kept asking me to spell my (old) street. Waterloo. "W. A. Water plus loo. Waterloo." I spelled the whole thing out for him, but he kept spelling it wrong with his pen. I couldn't believe a guy too stupid to tie his own shoes had any jurisdiction over me, whatsoever.

"You know it's yo' weed! It ain't mine! it ain't mine!!!!!!!!!"

He handed me the ticket.

"Thank you," I said with a smile so smug you could open 2 cans of tuna fish on the corners of my mouth. That's alright. I didn't care. I was just gonna wipe my ass with 123 dollars and throw it down the toilet anyway. I was out of toilet paper. The Cecil Hotel just lost it's bargain value. We're now up to $428. Should have just stayed at the Jolly Roger. They have HBO and you can cross the street wherever you goddamn well please.

I couldn't wait to get out. Kept thinking someone was going to kill me and then take the 28 dollars that was left on my credit card.

I was about to go on a one-nighter tour in Northern California with Lord Carrett. He told me I could stay with him in San Jose the night before the first date. I checked out on Monday.

"You're leaving a day early?" the woman at the front desk asked.

"I'm leaving 6 days late."

The tour was rough, and I got back a week later, stayed on Ryan's couch until July 1st and then moved into my friend's friend's house in Westchester, dead smack in the center between Venice and the airport, and Marina Del Rey and Inglewood (up to no good). Got my own room: Paying rent like a grown up.

I've been working ever since. Out of town all the time. Working colleges and clubs and making green. It's hard to comprehend what it's like to be 100% broke unless you're living it. Even now I can't reexperience the stress: The impending doom that always looms. No matter what you do you can barely even afford to get yourself to work, and there's nothing you can do to get yourself out of it. Any handout whatsoever feels so pathetic. It was only 5 months ago and it was such a different situation, I can't even remember what it was like.

Special shouts out to all the motherfuckers that helped me when I needed it the most: Matt Hummel, Jay Larson, Ryan Sickler, Chris Norris, Randy and Sissy Bobbitt, Dave Bernier and Amanda Brown, Peter and Cindy Fulchiron, David "Petie" Fulchiron, Eric Edwards, and Tracy Scott.
terça-feira, novembro 27, 2007 
Sexual deviants are conspiring to save the world.

I went to a Chinese food place one time: my favorite Chinese resturant. They've got my favorite chow mein. Really thick.

Chow Mein is always relative. Some places give you crunchy noodles like potato sticks. Some places just give you vegetables and chicken and then there's no noodles at all. Maybe bits and pieces of a fat noodle here and there.

Not my joint on Melrose. It's out the wok, off the hook.

So on with the story. No one's at the counter when I walk in. Just some dude manning the wok. He goes in the back and tells someone to come up front.

It's a girl and she's pretty sexy. Big hogans. They're fake, but I don't care.

"2 item combo with just chow mein." Why do I even order the 2 items? I just want the chow mein. It might not be an item, but it sure is delicious. Goddamn it. I'm getting hungry just thinking about it. I'll fix that right now.

I'm watching her scoop up the noodles, cause I can't think about anything else at all.
Big hands.
Oh no. Rewind to the fake tits.
Oh no. Look at the face.
Oh no. Dude. It's a man. It's a man. It's a man. No don't!!!!!!! Oh, he just used his bare hands to slide the stray noodles hanging over the box, back in. Disgusting. Yeah. Make sure you get those Lee Press On's all over my shit. Thank you.
What was he doing in the back? Did he wash his hands?
What do I do?
"What items do you want?" asks the now obviously masculine voice.
"Orange chicken," offers my now nervous and feminine voice.

At this point, for some reason he's got his face up to my container of food and he's breathing out of his nose onto my chicken. Oh Jesus Christ. I'm ready to abort mission.

I go through with it. I order some pepper beef and suck it up. He's a goddamn person right?

Right. He's a human being. A human being who may or may not have had his nuts cut off. That's not really it though. It's the fact that Melrose is only a couple of blocks South of Santa Monica Blvd. I used to work at a place and also live up there. Which means I've seen transvestites working the streets for years now.

One time me and my friend John were out skateboarding in West Hollywood (hey-ay!), and we were taking a shortcut through a neighborhood school pretty much south of the Fat Burger on Santa Monica Blvd. We ran across a meeting of about 40-50 transvestites on a baseball field while one dude, not in drag, was giving them a speech. Looked like a post-op version of The Warriors. I assume it was a work meeting about customer service. A peptalk from the Cyrus of transvestite pimps.

"Caaaaaan yooooooou diiiiiiiiiiiiiig iiiiiiiiiiiiiit?"

They just work the street. Straight up, hang out there and pick dudes up. Disease. Disease, Jerry! Disease! (to be read like a yelling George Costanza).

I'm not alone in my disgust. And it has nothing to do with homophobia. These gay guys I used to work with used to spend hours talking about how gross they thought the whole thing is. It's tranaphobia and it's perfectly ok as long as you don't punch anyone. I'm totally cool if they want to get married to each other. It would just make for a confusing ceremony.

I started to think too much. I didn't want it anymore. I shouldn't have paid for it. I told myself I would eat it, but my appetite was gone. If this dude wasn't going to look out for his own genitals, how was he going to look out for my immune system?

What could I have done though? Just said I didn't want it anymore?

"I'm sorry. I don't want that food anymore. You just touched it after you willingly severed your own cock. It's not you. It's me and my issues."

My friend Matt Hummel said I should have paid for it, then turned around and threw it in the trash. Like, "I can't eat that, and it's because you are a mutant!!!!!!!"

So I drove home thinking of ways I could salvage the meal. I was pretty poor at the time and wasting food would come back to haunt me the second starvation set in. Plus that was the whole argument concerning grocery shopping vs. fast food. Eating out is financially irresponsible, but Chinese food is almost as good as grocery shopping because you can have 2 or 3 go arounds, and it can pretty much last you a whole day.

I was thinking, I could fry it in a pan and that would kill the AIDS. I even thought of freezing it, then thawing it out again.

Now I'm pissed. I was just looking for a goddamn simple pleasure in my life, now I'm riding a rollercoaster of neurosis. My friend Jay would later that day joke that I was a headcase, that I over thought the whole situation, but you should have seen that motherfucker when we went to a barber shop in San Jose and they called out to the back room for someone to come cut his hair.

Out walks the Walter Payton of Transvestites. Shoulders like tombstones and the vocabulary of a Mexican immigrant just 3 days over the border. That's because he was a Mexican immigrant 3 days over the border. Me and my boy Ryan were laughing so hard. I couldn't even look at Jay. When I did peek, he looked like a little boy getting a haircut. You know that pout they put on before they get the lollipop?

"I got your Lollipop right here."

After the haircut he was on the streets of San Jose screaming in misery. Loud. He had a batch of HIV chicken chow mein on his head.

Back to my car in LA. I saw In and Out Burger. I parked at said restaurant. I put the Chinese food in front of a trash can, not in, but next to.

When I came out, the Chinese food was gone. Way to go, Tranny. Your plan is effective. One more homeless person goes a day without starving. The good part is, it's like 2 or 3 meals, so whoever took it didn't have to go grocery shopping.

This story made me hungry. I'm going to the bank and then to In and Out. It doesn't keep, but it's delicious and pretty cheap.
quarta-feira, novembro 14, 2007 
I almost went the whole day without writing anything. I almost went the past 6 months without writing anything. I knew I had to write something before I logged off tonight. What if I don't wake up tomorrow? Then the last thing I wrote about would be Lindsay Lohan. I love her like Herby does, but I don't want that to be my last statement ever to the world at large. I can go all week without thinking about her. But there it would lie for eternity, or until someone figured out my password and deleted my account. "Wow, that Matt Fulchiron really must have liked Lindsay Lohan."

Not really. She's alright. She's got nice teeth. I like so many other people, so much more.

Today was a shitty day. I spent the whole time just getting ready to go on the road again after just getting back from the road yesterday. Then I went up at The Comedy Store at 1am, and it fuckin' blew. Blew trumpets! Of glory! I had the best time just dicking around in front of 8 people. Would have been ten, but 2 went to the bathroom. That's the crowd reaction to The Full Charge lately as I'm walking on stage: "Now would be a good time to go take a piss." I think I look more interesting than the others, but what do I know?

It was a nice change of pace. I spent the last week doing a college in Arkansas and 4 days at the Fort Lauderdale Improv with probably my favorite comedian Daniel Tosh. It was tons of fun, but it was definitely work. Tonight was just bullshit, and if you've ever seen my act, that's pretty much the definition of what I do. Filling up my time with whatever I can think of besides actual work: Much like you at your job.

Lately I've been wondering what the point is of being a comedian. What's the point of being anything? How bad does it suck that you have to pick one thing and do JUST that 8 hours a day (15-50 minutes a day for me)? I wish I could be something different every day. Be married to someone different everyday. Have a different set of phone numbers everyday. Would it be better? Would it be more exciting or just frustrating?

Ever have a first day at work? Holy Fuck! I wanna go home. Everybody's got it together except you. Everybody knows everything except you. And they're annoyed with you. Annoyed because you don't know everything about their miserable little office that is completely obsolete to the entire universe except to them and their 70,000 square feet of desks, computers, and telephones. But you don't have to worry. You're just working there until your album comes out, until your book comes out, until your true calling comes out, until your retirement pension comes out.

Ever have a 1,000th day at work? It kills you to know exactly how it's going to go. Eric's going to ask you to go smoke with him at 10:30. Lara's going to ask you what the phone number is to T.G.I.Friday's a half hour before lunch. Jonesy's Jukebox will reair at 6:00.

Questions emerge: "Is this what I'm supposed to do? Would I be more happy in New York? London? Modesto? Would a vacation make a difference? What if I ate better? Drank less? Should I be religious? Should I join a gym? Should I join The Army? What the fuck is Kabbalah? Does it work? Would I be happier if I was Owen Wilson? Luke Wilson? That other buff Wilson? Did Mother Teresa feel good about herself (I heard she had her doubts about Catholicism but I was too busy staring at my cell phone's report that there were no new messages from people I wouldn't even call back anyway to buy Time Magazine and read about it), Are my parents happy? Were my parents content when they were my age or were they just faking it to appear strong? Can love last forever? Or is it just a bunch of short spurts of lust spread out amongst random tall people? Is there something greater than this existance for me? Is there a dream I should be paying attention to? A true identity I'm ignoring? Should I have Chinese or In and Out for dinner?"

Anyway, I forgot the point of this blog. The point is I'm going to bed now. The point is I changed my life. Because now if I were to die in my sleep, the Lindsay Lohan blog is only just another of many silly blogs, and not the last thing I ever wrote.
segunda-feira, maio 21, 2007 
I didn't think that I did, but then I watched Mean Girls. She has really nice teeth. Not perfect, just nice.
quarta-feira, maio 17, 2006 

I went in for an audition for the Emmy Nominated, "Punked."  I like auditions about as much as I like rectal surgery (alot!).  In the waiting room, I ran into this chick named Jen who's friends with my ex-girlfriend.  Radical.  Small talk makes me comfortable. Here we go with the questions.


"How you doing?"


"Good (lie)."


"Don't you just love Kevin?"


Kevin is my exgirlfriend's fiance.  I know this becuase I replied, "To Who?" after I got a text message from my exgirlfriend on what would have been our anniversary, telling me she had gotten engaged.  We were together just 2-3 months prior and I have to say, I was very surprised that my heart only broke into about 3 or 4 million peices. 


It's cool.  I was only at a New Years party at the time I got the message.  All I had to do was wear a fake smile on my face and pretend like I was having a good time for 5 or 6 hours before I could go home and cry.  And the 10 gallons of alcohol I was pouring down my throat only made me rational and more stable.


Now this chick is asking me if I love Kevin.  No.  I used to love his fiance.  I hate Kevin, if only by default.


It came out in a sarcastic compromise, "Yeah, he's really great."  The tone was honest.  The words were not.


"Do you guys ever hang out?"


At this point I sat up in my chair and started eyeing the place up for hidden cameras.   I thought Ashton might have been running out of celebrities to "Punk" and the auditions were actually held to play tricks on unknown comedians with one whole entire TV credit.


Was this girl for real?  Do I love my ex-girlfriend's fiance?  Do I hang out with him?  Yeah.  I also go over to their house, clean the place up, and throw out their trash. When I'm done with that, I usually get a beer with the guy that stole my car stereo, and then I catch a movie with the yo boys that jumped and maced me back in '93.


"No."  I whined like a little boy.  She never picked up on how crazy her line of questioning was.


Then she and another girl start talking about the Punked audition process.  How you have to go in there and insult each other. 


OH NO!


I was whipped daily on the playground in the 80's, berated and broken down from mean comments from the other kids.  I was crazy smart and good looking as a kid (as a kid), but my classmates had me believing I was smart as a rock and as cute as an ugnaut.  Mostly because I didn't have a hell of alot of comebacks when it came down to the insessant back and forth of  insults that goes along with being a kid. 


In fact, to this day, as a comedian, if someone heckles me I got nothing to say to them.  If I insult them back I feel like they've gotten the best of me.  Like I've lost my cool.  Don't get me wrong.  I've said things so ill to people, that I've felt bad afterwards, but that's not the point.  I don't have instincts to insult people.  I've surpressed them due to so many guilty years at Catholic school. We're all God's children right? How can I say something mean to someone?  A deity I don't believe in anymore created them.


So they call us in.  Me and this sweet actress who laughs at all my jokes.  She's confided in me that she hates to insult people.  Love you, girl xoxoxoxoxox. My heart was warm again, no kidding.


So we go in and we start to go into a hilarious scenario where I'm supposed to be a resturant manager (sure, why not?) and I accuse the sweetheart actess of going in the bathroom and destroying it.  It goes no where and I'm so used to giving dead, low energy performances on stage that I'm arguing, but I'm not yelling and there's hardly any emotion behind it.  That's how I argue in real life.  I try not to get upset.


So the director, I knew he was the director because he had a beard.  Oh and he was telling me what to do.  Oh and he was a huge douche bag.  The director says, "This time I want you to acuse her of stealing something from your record store, and my man....


I hate when people address me as, "My Man."


...my man, you need to act like you just drank a can of soda.................and put some energy into it.


"Sure," I replied through a smirk and half closed eyes.  It wasn't even noon yet.


So we start fake yelling at each other.  No one's buying any of this, wouldn't matter if it was 50 percent off.  After a while, sweetheart actress goes, "Why are you yelling at me?"


And I scream at the top of my lungs,


"BECAUSE I JUST DRANK A CAN OF SODA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"


I have never been more proud of myself.  Perfectly executed and it was halfway out of my mouth the split second the synapse fired off in my head.  Glorious.


I was the only one who thought so.


They wanted us to hang out in the waiting room.  I ran into someone I knew.  We were talking and my adrenaline had just kicked in.  I was turning bright red.  I get embarrassed way easy.  The next 3 part exchange went down in about .87 seconds:


Friend:                "Dude you're bright red."


Casting Director: "Matt, you can leave."


Me:                     "I gotta get out of here."


I was out like parachute pants, yo.  Gone.  Ghost.  Bass in your face means "Peace, see you later."  I could hear people laughing as the doors closed.


The day before I told Punked alumni Steve Rannazzisi I was going in and I didn't want to because I was too nice.  He said, "Just be yourself."


I was myself.  And myself got embarrassed.


That's crazy though. Why am I expected to be myself when I'm auditioning for a show that so blatantly wants to be Candid Camera?

segunda-feira, fevereiro 06, 2006 

I invented a drink this weekend called "The Midlife Crisis."

It's a Miller High Life in one hand and a Wild Turkey 101 with no ice in the other.  It's High Life vs. Low life (Drinking Wild Turkey 101 is the liquor I most associate with feeling like a low life) (Wild Turkey 81, otherwise known as "Mild Turkey" does not count).

OK so.  For all you mathmaticians out there: 

High Life + Low Life = MIDlife (Crisis).

I'd tell you to enjoy it with your friends, but I'm afraid this is definitely one to have by yourself.  Just make sure you order it by name. Be like, "Midlife Crisis, please."  Then when the bartender asks what it is, show 'em that attitude you're famous for.

Treat the bandtender like they just asked you to put up a bookshelf while simultaneously giving them directions to The Interstate 5. 

Be like, "Sigh!  A Miller High Life and a shot of Wild Turkey.  Gosh!"  Then when they start to mix it, be all, "NO! NOT TOGETHER!  Jesus Christ!"  Then tip 21%.  You're not cheap, you're just a dick.

quarta-feira, fevereiro 01, 2006 

Last Saturday I was settling into the V.I.P. (read: Very Important Person) Booth at the Irvine Improv at the Irvine Spectrum.  I was taking a deep breath, inhaling oxygen: my new alternative to drinking alchohol.  I sat in the booth shaking off my walk from parking lot F12 through the 3 ring suburban circus of bleach blond mayhem that is the Irvine Spectrum.  I had 3 shows to do that night: A seven o'clock, a nine o'clock, and an 11 o'clock.  Whatever.  Ain't nothin' gonna breaka' my stride.  I'm The Full Charge.  Nobody gonna hold me down.


            Normally I'm nervous before a show.  But that day I was feeling pretty calm.


            Frank Kelly, the club manager walked up to me with a middle-aged women at his side.  "Well, looks like I got another fan who wants to meet me," I said to my arrogant, yet insecure self.


            "Matt, this is So And So."  He said what the woman's name was instead of "So And So," but I never hear anyone's name when they're introduced to me.  I have to really concentrate to say my name.  It's hard to remember a name like "Matt."  It's takes extra focus to deliver it at the right time.


            So when you meet me, I'll be in my head like, "My name's Matt, my name's Matt, my name's Matt.  Tell her….your name is…….. Matt."


            You'll be like, "My name's so and so."


            And I'll be like, "My name's, Matt."  I'll say it real casjjj, but there was actually an unprecedented amount of effort that went into it.


            So anyway I figure this lady caught me the night before or something and wants to meet me, since I'm so great, pumping out 10 minute comedy sets at will.


            "So And So is going to be standing on the lefthand side of the stage translating everything you say into sign language," smiles Frank in a "you can go ahead and get uncomfortable now," kind of way.


            I smile back.  Sweat is already beeding on my forehead.


            "Cool!" I smile.  "Awesome."


            I don't want anybody up on stage with me.  I'm The Full Charge.  Now I gotta go at Half Pace.


            To those of you who don't know me, I get irrationally upset about any minor thing that might throw off my show, even though everyone's only there to see Robert Schimmel, I gotta get all bent out of shape.


            I slumped.  A waiter came by with, "You need anything?"


            "Budweiser."  O2 was out.


            So they start the announcements and there's smoke coming off of So And So's fingers, who has already taken the stage. 


            I scrambled for So And So's name. Since the announcer didn't introduce her, I realized I was going to have to acknowledge her presence, and it'd be mighty human of me to know her name.


            "What's that lady's name on stage?" I ask the sound guy.


            Shrug.


            "What's the sound language lady's name?" I ask Frank.  He didn't know either. He's the one that introduced us.  Now he doesn't know her name.


            "How many people are ready to have a good time tonight?  Your MC for this evening has been on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, (hey it's a quote, I've gotta do it word for word or else it's bullshit) (bullshit is journalist's term, I don't expect everyone to know the jargon).please give it up for Matt Fulchiron." 


            Up I walk to face the wild and crazy 7pm crowd. 


            "Tonight's show is close captioned for the hearing impaired," I pulled out of my ass in order to negate from the fact that So And So was not this woman's actual name. "Let's hear it for your interpreter,"  I offered.  The crowd cheered.


            I heard a dial tone in my head.  I was off the hook.


            I shouldn't have been worried about having her up there.  It actually made for a better show.  It definitely stretched out my material.  After every joke, I'd have to turn and see how they were being translated, especially after anything about sex or drugs.


            Key highlights turned out to be whenever I mentioned marijuana, she would hold an invisible joint up to her mouth.  I found myself saying the word, "Marijuana," and then turning to So And So who was naturally a couple seconds behind and saying, "Do it.  Do it."  Then she'd hold the invisible refer up to her lips and my heart was warm with happiness. 


            I told the audience, "This is the most fun I've ever had."


            At one point I told the audience, "I'm single, if any of you ladies want a piece of this sweet ass."


            So And So stuck her ass out, smacked it, and rubbed it.  Really, So And So.  Is that absolutely necessary?


            I watched the ordeal for Schimmel.  The fun never stopped.  I've seen Schimmel a million times, and I think he's hilarious, but So And So's demonstrations of his stories about him effing his wife in a wheelchair controlled by a blow tube, and his experiences with testicular cancer killed me.  Watching her kept my head in the stories more than usual.  And it was amazing to see how quickly So And So could come up with descriptions for everything, every comic said.


            I took Schimmel off the stage and it was time to thank So And So.  "Let's hear it for your interpreter."  Hey I only had an hour when I was off stage to find out her real name.  Hee Haw.  I'm a Jackass.  At least I know it.


            I told my friend about the experience.  He's like, "Was it fun?"


And I was like, "Fun?  That shit was deaf!"  Then I gave him the universal sign of approval:  One huge THUMBS UP!